a year after the film's debut, pointing guns at bank employees. Thankfully no shots were fired, but the two escaped with $120,000. Turns out the culprits used to work at the branch and - unlike Ben - were eventually charged with robbery.

, and later fessed up to additional plans to launch his own "Project Mayhem." According to his fellow classmates, Shaw's devotion to the film and Chuck Palahniuk novel was well-known and seen as strange. In 2010 the teen pled guilty to attempted arson and attempted criminal possession of a weapon, and was sentenced to three and a half years in prison.

Dexter

We like

Dexter

as much as the next guy, but that doesn't mean we aspire to be real-life serial killers. Not so for Indiana teen

. In 2009 the 17-year-old - whose dedication to the Showtime hit proved to be highly unhealthy - acted on his unquenchable taste for homicide, strangling his 10-year-old brother to death with his bare hands. When interrogated by police Conley explained that he'd always fantasized about committing a murder, and related to the title character on

Dexter

, which he had been watching obsessively. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Scream

This 1996 horror film starring Neve Campbell sparked several copycat murders and crimes, most notably at the hands of Thierry Jaradin. In 2001 the 24-year old Belgian truck driver killed his 15-year-old neighbor while wearing a long black robe and plastic ghost mask - the exact "ghostface" costume worn by the killer in the movie - after she denied his amorous advances. After confessing the crime to his father, Jaradin revealed that the murder had been premeditated and inspired by Scream.

Seinfeld

One of our favorite

Seinfeld

episodes is the one where Kramer and Newman hatch an ingenious scam to take thousands of accumulated cans and bottles to Michigan, where the yield for depositing them is five cents higher than in New York. A series of hilarious mishaps followed. The real-life version is also funny, but for all the wrong reasons. A couple from Maine, along with a Massachusetts resident, were accused of

, all of which were apparently bought out of state. The overall earnings for this hefty deposit came to more than $10,000. Of course, no one was able to enjoy the extra cash, and the group was charged with fraud.